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England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> K (a minor), Re [2006] EWHC 1007 (Fam) (09 May 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2006/1007.html Cite as: [2006] EWHC 1007 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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K (A Minor) |
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Roger Bickerdike (instructed by CAFCASS) for the 1st Defendant
Mrs Rosemary Exall (instructed by Bowmans Family Law Solicitors) for the 2nd Defendant
Miss Elizabeth Rylands (instructed by John Delany & Co) for the 3rd Defendant
Roger Bickerdike (instructed by Leeds City Council) for the 4th Defendant
Hearing date: 6 April 2006
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Crown Copyright ©
Sir Mark Potter, P :
"(i) K, as a child, lacks capacity to make decisions about medical treatment to be delivered to herself for her physical healthcare.
(ii) Having regard to K's best interests, and in the event that the Consultants in Neonatal and Medicine are the Consultants responsible for K's care at the Applicant Trust treating K:
(a) In the event that K recovers from the current episode of septicaemia, but remains dependent on mechanical ventilation long-term (which for the avoidance of doubt constitutes several weeks) due to a further deterioration in her neuro-muscular condition, the Trust be at liberty to withdraw the mechanical ventilation and allow her to die.
(b) If during K's current illness, or a future inter-current illness, in the opinion of the Consultant, medical staff death is inevitable and imminent (within a few hours) the Trust be at liberty to remove K from the ventilator prior to actual cardiac arrest, so to allow her to be held by her parents as she dies, rather than by dying on the ventilator.
(c) In the event that K survives the septicaemia illness and is weaned from mechanical ventilation, the Trust be at liberty to withhold assisted ventilation or other extraordinary means of life support if she suffers a further significant deterioration due to either (i) progression of her underlying neuro-muscular condition or (ii) a severe inter-current illness such as septicaemia. If at any time during K's current hospital admission she were to collapse leading to cardio-pulmonary arrest the Trust be at liberty to withhold advanced means of life support, including cardio-pulmonary resuscitation.
(d) In the event K recovers from her current septicaemia illness and is weaned from assisted ventilation, but remains on total parenteral nutrition which would not be sustainable in the long-term due to the current septicaemia or thrombosis of central venous lines, the Trust be at liberty to seek Directions and guidance from the court as to the appropriate action at that time."
"1. K, as a child, lacks capacity to make decisions about medical treatment to be delivered to herself for her physical healthcare.
2. Having regard to K's best interests, and in the opinion of the Consultant and Health Care Team treating K at the Applicant Trust:
(i) It should lawful for the Applicant Trust, having regard to the fact that the responsible Paediatric Medical Consultants have reached a decision that K's medical condition and prognosis are such that it should lawful, to discontinue parenteral nutrition;
(ii) it is lawful that the infusion of fluids should cease;
(iii) K should continue to receive full non-life prolonging palliative care, offering relief of any distress with analgesic and anxiolytic medication and should be allowed to die in comfort and dignity."
Treatment delays death but neither improves life's quality nor potential. Needlessly prolonging treatment in these circumstances is futile and burdensome and not in the best interests of the patient; hence there is no legal obligation for a doctor to provide it…
… the child may be able to survive with treatment, but there are reasons to believe that giving of treatment may not be in the child's best interests. For example, the child may develop or already have such a degree of irreversible impairment that it would be unreasonable to expect them to bear it. Continuing treatment might leave the child in a worse condition than already exists with the likelihood of further deterioration leading to an "impossibly poor life". The child may not be capable now or in the future of taking part in decision making or other self directed activity.
"There is no significant ethical difference between withdrawing (stopping) and withholding treatments, given the same ethical objective."
"In deciding what is best for the disabled patient the judge must have regard to the patient's welfare as the paramount consideration. That embraces issues far wider than the medical. Indeed it would be undesirable and probably impossible to set bounds to what is relevant to a welfare determination"
"The judicial decision will incorporate broader ethical, social, moral and welfare considerations."
As stated by Hedley J in Portsmouth NHS Trust v Wyatt [2005] 1FLR 21 at para [23]:
"Best interests must be given a generous interpretation. As Dame Elizabeth Butler-Sloss P said in Re A (Male Sterilisation) [2000] 1 FLR 549 at 555:
… best interests encompasses medical, emotional and all other welfare issues.
… The infinite variety of the human condition never ceases to surprise and it is that fact that defeats any attempt to be more precise in the definition of best interest."
"should draw up a balance sheet… of actual benefit… [and] any counterbalancing disbenefits … an obvious instance … would be the apprehension, the risk, and the discomfort inherent in the operation. Then the judge should enter…the potential gains and losses in each instance making some estimate of the extent of the possibility of the gain or loss might accrue …[in order to] be better placed to strike a balance between the sum of the certain and possible gains against the sum of the certain and possible losses. Obviously, only if the account is in relatively significant credit will the judge conclude that the application is likely to advance the best interests [of the person lacking capacity]".
"The task therefore is for me to weigh up that which is sometimes called the "benefits and dis-benefits" but which I would prefer to call the advantages of giving or not giving potential treatments, and to balance them in order to decide the best interests of L with regard to his future treatment. I should like to refer to a passage in the judgment of Lord Donaldson in In Re J (A Minor) (Wardship: Medical Treatment) [1991] Fam 33 at 47:
There is without doubt a very strong presumption in the favour of a course of action which will prolong life, but … it is not irrebuttable… [A]ccount has to be taken of the pain and suffering and quality of life which the child will experience if life is prolonged. Account is also to be taken of the pain and suffering involved in the proposed treatment itself…
We know that the instinct and desire for survival is very strong. We all believe in and assert the sanctity of human life… [E]ven very severely handicapped people find a quality of life rewarding which to be un-handicapped may seem manifestly intolerable. People have an amazing adaptability. But in the end there are cases in which the answer must be that it is not in the interests of the child to subject it to treatment which would cause increased suffering and produce no commensurate benefit, giving the fullest possible weight to the child's and mankind's, desire to survive."
"There is a strong presumption in favour of preserving life, but not where treatment would be futile, and there is no obligation on the medical profession to give treatment which would be futile. I agree with Hedley J [in Wyatt] that the court should be focusing on best interests rather than the concept of intolerability, although the latter may be encompassed within the former."
Further, in Wyatt v Portsmouth NHS Trust and Charlotte Wyatt [2005] 1 WLR 3995, having reviewed the authorities and set out the "intellectual milestones" for the judge in a case of this kind, Wall LJ said at paras [90]–[91]
"We urge caution in the application to children of factors relevant to the treatment of adults, although some general statements of principle plainly apply to both. We repeat that R (Burke) v General Medical Council (Official Solicitor intervening) [2005] QB 424 concern the prospective withdrawal of A & H, competent adult patient. It was not concerned with what was meant by best interests in the context of the treatment of an incompetent child. At best, therefore, Munby J's identification of "intolerability" as the touchstone of best interests is obiter….
We do not, however, dismiss "intolerability" as a factor all together. As we have already stated, we agree with Hedley J that whilst "intolerable to the child" should not be seen either as a gloss on or a supplementary guide to best interests, it is, as he said, a valuable guide in the search for best interests in his kind of case."
"I would deprecate any attempt my this court to lay down.. an all-embracing test since the circumstances of these tragic cases are so infinitely various. I do not know of any demand by the judges who have to deal with these cases at first instance for this court to assist them by laying down any test beyond that which is already the law: that the interests of the ward are the first and paramount consideration, subject to the gloss on that test which I suggest, that in determining where those interests lie the court adopts the standpoint of the reasonable and responsible parent who has his or her child's best interest at heart."
"The judge, having rightly put on one side the question of whether there was a legally binding advance directive, looked, on the one hand, at the consequences of withdrawing nutrition and the effect this would have and, on the other hand, at the continuance of a life in which there is some feeling of pain, some sensation and some slight ability to answer questions. He came to the conclusion that it was in the best interests of the patient to accede to the unanimous wish of those who are responsible for her treatment.
As I have said, the Official Solicitor supports this application. These cases are always agonisingly difficult… but judges have to apply the law as they find it. English law, as it stands at present, places a very heavy burden on those who are advocating a course which would lead inevitably to a cessation of a human life. In my judgment, it impossible for this court to interfere with the judge's judgment."
"I do not consider that from one day to the next all the routine discomfort, distress and pain that the doctors describe (but not the ones that I have now excluded) outweigh those benefits so that I can say that it is in his best interests that those benefits and life itself could immediately end. On the contrary, I positively consider that his life still does have benefits, and it is his life, which we should enable to continue, subject to excluding the treatment I have identified."
"I wish to stress that this is a very fact specific decision taken in the actual circumstances as they are for this child and today. These circumstances include, critically, the facts that he already has been and is on ventilation and has already survived the age of 18 months; he is assumed not to be brain-damaged; he is in a close relationship with a family that have spent and are able to spend very considerable time with him; and does already have an accumulation of experiences and the cognition to gain pleasure from them.".